Discontent grows at MoD plan
to shift Defexpo and Aero India to Goa
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 29th Nov 15
As opposition mounts in Goa to Defence
Minister Manohar Parrikar’s plan to shift India’s two biggest defence
exhibitions --- Defexpo and Aero India --- to that state, it now emerges the controversial
decision to move to Goa is based on a flawed premise.
The defence ministry had said Defexpo 2016
was shifting to Goa because the Indian Trade Promotion Organisation (ITPO)
would be renovating Pragati Maidan next February, when the Defexpo was
scheduled.
Yet, ITPO officials contacted by Business
Standard confirm that Pragati Maidan would be available in February, if the
defence ministry reconsiders its plan to shift.
“We are keen that the defence ministry holds
Defexpo in Pragati Maidan, rather than Goa. It is our most prestigious
exhibition, and our grounds and facilities will be available to them as usual,”
says RP Dhusia, Deputy General Manager (Civil), ITPO.
Besides its prestige, Defexpo is also
ITPO’s biggest revenue earner. Meenakshi Singh, who handles marketing for ITPO,
said Defexpo 2014 earned Rs 13 crore for ITPO, more than 10 per cent of its
annual revenue of Rs 125 crore.
Dhusia says ITPO has had long-standing
plans to renovate Pragati Maidan, which the defence ministry is aware of.
However, no work is imminent since the government has never accorded financial
sanctions.
While the defence ministry has cited renovation
of Pragati Maidan as the reason to move Defexpo to Goa, no rationale has been offered
for also shifting Aero India --- which was held in Bengaluru on odd years,
while Delhi hosts Defexpo on even years.
The decision to shift Aero India has
stirred up a hornet’s nest in Goa, with civil society bodies alleging that this
was part of a major land scam. They have credibly argued that the need for a
new runway for Aero India would trigger further land acquisition.
Business Standard has reported (November
23, “Land acquisition cloud on Manohar
Parrikar”) that Goa NGOs like United Goans Foundation (UGF) have launched a
popular movement to block the state government’s transfer to the defence
ministry of 150 acres that Panjim had earlier acquired from the Naqueri-Betul
panchayat for the Goa Industrial Development Corporation (GIDC), citing the
need for job creation.
Goan suspicions are further inflamed by contradictory
statements from Chief Minister Laxmikant Parsekar, who is widely regarded as a political
placeholder, who allows his predecessor, Manohar Parrikar, to pull the strings
from backstage.
Goa newspaper, Herald, quoted Parsekar as promising
that the defence ministry would only use the land only temporarily, for the
duration of Defexpo and Aero India. However, documents obtained by the
Naqueri-Betul panchayat through the Right to Information (RTI) act, suggest
Parsekar was not being truthful.
The documents, which Business Standard
possesses, include a personal letter from Parrikar to Parsekar dated June 12,
asking for “allotment of about 150 acres of land on the coastline which can
accommodate 10,000 Ft (feet) Runway along the coast so that a permanent venue
for conduct of Aero Show and Defexpo can be set up (sic).”
The GIDC noting sheet on which Parrikar’s
request was quickly granted, explicitly sanctions “a permanent venue for
conduct of Aero Show and Defexpo…”
In an editorial, Herald has lamented, “(J)ust
one letter by the Defence Minister asking for land… was treated not as a
request but an order by the Parsekar government.”
In addition to the discontent in Goa and
the ITPO, arms corporations planning to exhibit in Defexpo complain bitterly
about the ad hoc decision-making. “It takes a year of planning and crores of
rupees to participate in a major exhibition. First it was decided to move
Defexpo from Delhi to Goa. Then, because making Goa ready would take time, it
was postponed from February 17-20 to March-end.”
Pragati Maidan, a 123-acre complex in the
heart of Delhi with more than 61,290 square feet of covered exhibition area in
16 display halls and 10,000 square metres of open display area, offers a far
better option say international exhibitors than the empty land in Goa, on which
the DEO plans to set up a tented show.
The defence ministry did not respond to
Business Standard’s written request for comments.
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